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          Religious Life Without Integrity
        
      
        
          The Sexual Abuse Crisis 
          in the Catholic Church
        
      
        
          By Barry M Coldrey
        
      
 5: THE LIFE OF AN INSTITUTIONThere are five levels of experience within 
        an institution - be the institution a sporting club, university department, 
        a school, an office or a prison - or be the institution a diocese or a 
        Religious Congregation. These levels might be  
        'The Mission Statement' or at the more 
          exalted level of a Church or a religious organisation, its sacred literature 
          down the ages. The privileged moment. The ordinary routine day-to-day existence. 'Ornery' (Mark Twain !) grotty, unsatisfactory, 
          unethical behaviour. Immoral and/or illegal behaviour. There is the level of principles deemed to 
        guide the organisation, its Bible, its Mission Statement, its 'Code of 
        Conduct'. These principles are framed in grand and generalised 
        rhetoric designed to give a 'warm inner glow' to the hearer or reader. 
        A 'Mission Statement' can be sparse on specifics; it provides a rallying 
        cry - not a precise programme of action. On big occasions, the President's, 
        (or director's or bishop's or Religious Superior's), reference to the 
        'Code of Conduct' is intended to act in the same same way. Since the principles 
        are framed at such a high level of generality, their relevance to day-to-day 
        conduct within the organisation maybe slight. Many associations experience privileged 
        moments when their membership live the Mission Statement ideals for 
        a short period or sense their abiding relevance in a heightened way. The 
        priest or bishop might experience this sensation on Christmas Day or Easter 
        Sunday as he gazes at the packed congregations; the college might seem 
        larger than life on its Annual Speech or Open Day; the university department 
        might exalt at a dinner to celebrate a large government grant; the association 
        might feel privileged on its annual Founder's Day celebration. Such periods are brief; personalities, 
        policy differences, power struggles petty and great are laid aside for 
        the duration. However, the privileged moment cannot last. The day-to-day 
        grind, the cut-and-thrust of the routine intervene. The rich atypical 
        experience is replaced by the daily round. Exaltation is replaced by hum-drum. Human weakness in all its forms reasserts 
        itself - the personalities, the tiredness, the numbing crises, the power 
        struggles, the policy differences, and up-to-a-point this is the human 
        condition in most groups, most of the time. However, the phrase 'up-to-a-point' is critical. 
        The reality of daily routine does not mean condoning vicious, immoral 
        or illegal activity. Institutions can descend from the routine with its 
        general earthiness to 'ornery', grotty, sub-standard behaviour. The line can be fine between the grotty and 
        unsatisfactory to the immoral and illegal. There is a difference 
        between the common scuttlebutt around personalities on the one hand, and 
        the systematic framing of an individual on the other. In the sexual abuse crisis, the churches 
        and church organisations - especially the Catholic church and its Religious 
        Congregations - have been shown to descend too often from the exalted 
        principles they profess and the low, and sometimes illegal behaviour of 
        some of their members. Hence the media furore and community outrage.   
       
 Crucifixion or PurgatoryOften at internal gatherings or in casual 
        conversations among men of my own Congregation it is common to refer to 
        the 'crucifixion' or 'purgatorial experience' we are undergoing because 
        of the savage allegations of abuse in the Brothers schools of the past, 
        relentlessly repeated ad nauseum in the media. Actually the words 'purgatory' and 'crucifixion' 
        do not necessarily imply innocence, but the way the words are used by 
        the speakers is just that: 'we' - the Brothers - are being treated unjustly 
        - we are abused (in and by the media) by the regular references to abuse. This is the kind of self-indulgence which 
        is being criticised from different angles in this exploration. Some Brothers 
        are suffering unjustly; they have done nothing wrong. However, collectively 
        we are not suffering unjustly. What has happened since 1989 is fully deserved 
        and was bound to occur - for the Brothers and for the English-speaking 
        church. Some bad things happened in the past, so many that an institutional 
        problem can be detected, requiring an over-all solution, not merely the 
        correction of a few misguided, weak, sick or evil confreres. Why ?  
        1 Real abuses (physical and sexual) occurred 
          in the educational institutions, orphanages (especially); boarding schools 
          (to some degree); day schools (occasionally). Overall, at least 7-10% 
          of Brothers and priests did molest a boy or boys. 2 When complaints were made, 1950s - 
          1980s, parents, relatives or friends who complained were regularly treated 
          badly steam-rollered by church officials at various levels, ignored, 
          misinformed and treated like mushrooms ! 3 During the 1990s, through the awakening, 
          a plethora of church officials of varying ability, integrity and effectiveness 
          have presented a muddled response to the problem - varying from effective 
          to pathetic. 4 ergo - the problems will not go away, 
          not (apparently) until 'we' (church, the Brothers) plumb the depths. Overall we are not suffering innocently 
        - though many individuals are. It is a case that if one acts so inadequately 
        and so badly for so long, certain unfortunate results must occur with 
        the regularity of night following day. Moreover, this does not address the other 
        sexual problems and infidelity against vows which had occurred much more 
        commonly than the average pious Catholic realises.   DefinitionsComplaints/Allegations can be divided into 
        three categories  
        1. Criminal - allegations of present or 
          recent sexual abuse against a child or an adult. 2. Criminal - allegations of past child 
          sexual abuse (CSA) made by, or concerning a person who is now an adult. 3. Non-Criminal - generally concerning 
          relationships between adults. These relationships between a Brother, priest 
        or nun and one of their parishioners, staff or clients is covered by concepts 
        of Professional Misconduct or Pastoral Abuse.   
       
 The Ten Levels of DenialA marked hostility to the investigator or 
        the whistleblower is one level of denial, the unconscious mental mechanism 
        which allows one to reject facts which are experienced as overwhelming 
        or a threat to one's integrity or homeostasis. Over the abuse crisis the 
        church has often been in denial rather than confronting the reality. Richard 
        Sipe has identified ten levels of denial after a careful study of courtroom 
        reports, media exposure and psychiatric treatment settings.  
        There is no problem; it can't be true  
          Church leaders bishops and religious 
            higher superiors have repeatedly made this pronouncement in defense 
            of clergy who have later admitted or have been proven to violate sexual 
            boundaries. While complete denial is harder and harder to maintain 
            in public in view of the large number of priests and Brothers convicted 
            of sexual offences and/or sent to 'Treatment Centres' for assistance, 
            this level can influence church leaders in private. Cover-up, conspiracy 
            and fraud are prevalent at this level of denial. Abuse of priests may exist, but it is 
          very rare  
          While the definition of 'rare' may reflect 
            personal assessment, a wide range of material suggests that abuse 
            among the priesthood is not rare by any reasonable definition. Criminal 
            convictions; numbers of priests and religious processed through treatment 
            centres; court monitored settlements, and close studies of some (US) 
            dioceses and minor seminaries make this plain. The media distorts everything  
          At this level of denial, church leaders 
            claim that the 'abuse crisis' is largely the creation of an inflamed 
            (and anti-Catholic) media. Widespread media coverage has contributed 
            to the heightened awareness of a sexually-abusive dimension to clerical 
            behaviour, but the media did not cause or increase delinquent behaviour 
            among priests. The facts are knowable from other evidence. Moreover, 
            if Bishops and heads of religious orders wished to have precise numbers 
            of priests/Brothers who have molested children, they could assemble 
            the figures within a few weeks from their own separate files and have 
            them collated nationwide. Sexual abuse by priests does occur but 
          it is no worse than in any other religious group; and it is less frequent 
          than in the general population  
          The current state of the evidence is 
            that a higher percentage of Catholic priests and religious have sexually 
            abused children/teenagers than among ministers of the Protestant denominations 
            and runs at about the same extent as abuse in the general population. 
            This latter is not as impressive as it may sound, since priests are 
            carefully selected, especially educated and trained, and officially-missioned 
            for service in a way that the general population is not. Their performance 
            should be better than that of the people as a whole. Blame the victim  
          Another form of denial is to blame the 
            victim for the abuse s/he suffered. It is not uncommon to hear a church 
            leader say: 'They wanted it they liked it.' It is sometimes claimed 
            that parents should be or have been more vigilant for their children's 
            welfare. A Canadian bishop once proferred the opinion that abuse was 
            the result of streetwise youngsters seducing naive clergy, which, 
            if true, would be a stunning indictment of priestly selection and 
            training. However, it is not true in the great majority of cases; 
            the adult has initiated the sexual activity. Abusers are sick, in the way that alcoholics 
          are sick  
          There is some truth in this for many 
            abusers. Hence the treatment centres for priests and male religious 
            to which reference has been made already. However, there is also the 
            reality of evil. Some clergy choose sex with a minor as a way of satisfying 
            themselves, while maintaining their clerical status. They choose 
            to abuse. These priests are not demented; nor driven by uncontrollable 
            urges. They are not out-of-control. Sexual abuse by clergy exisits, and 
          it is unfortunate. However, the consequences are not dire. The person 
          (victim) who alleges long term or dramatic consequences of abuse was 
          sick already.  
          Some victims of abuse are seriously affected 
            by the trauma, especially if the abuser was a respected community 
            figure. 'Father in only human'  
          Any appeal to fallen human nature is 
            no more an excuse for sexual abuse than for robbing a bank, or stealing, 
            or killing someone. The core issue is sin and breaking the law and 
            in this special context, violation of fiduciary responsibility behaviour 
            essentially incompatible with one's identity, mission and responsibilities. 'The sinner is at the heart of Christianity'  
          The call for forgiveness can be, and 
            has been used as a defence against accepting the reality of what has 
            occurred. Divine forgiveness is open to everyone at all times, but 
            it can be entered into, only when one accepts full responsibility 
            for his transgression, reforms and makes restitution. 'A few bad apples'   
          The is a fallacy in the senses that (a) 
            too many priests/Brothers have offended for the use of the word 'few' 
            to be accurate; and (b) the statement denies the structural problems 
            in the selection, training and life-styles of priests when 'bad apples' 
            suggests that we are dealing only with separate human problems. The unspoken message given by the church 
        to (sexual) abusers is: "While we don't particularly want this element 
        in the church, if you do abuse and you're caught, we can move you to another 
        diocese. If in time you are caught there also and charges are brought 
        against you, we will assist you to deny the charges. We will discredit 
        witnesses, withhold important records of your whereabouts over the years 
        that you served with us, and as far as possible we will publicly support 
        you to discourage witnesses who have the audacity to challenge our authority. 
        (Baker, Josephine, Director, Organisation for Recovery from Institutional 
        Abuse, The Irish Times, 4 April 2000, p. 7)   
       
 Five men, one of them a priest, have been 
        arrested during a police investigation into sex abuse at St. Mary's Hall, 
        the preparatory school for Stoneyhurst College in Lancashire. The five 
        have been charged with indecent assault on young boys and will appear 
        at Blackburn Magistrates Court on 18 June (1999). Another former teacher 
        at St. Mary's Hall was earlier charged with indecent assault. The police 
        investigation into possible abuse at the school between 1968 and 1998 
        is continuing. The police have emphasised however, that there is nothing 
        to suggest that pupils now attending St Mary's Hall or Stonyhurst are 
        at any risk. ('Five men arrested from Jesuit preparatory school', The 
        Tablet, 1 May 1999)   
       
 The Faithful MajorityAnyone who has been prepared to grind their 
        way through this grim material needs to keep the majority of priests in 
        mind, while s/he contemplates the problem minority. It will not be until Judgement Day that we 
        will recognise properly the thousands upon thousands of good, and often 
        heroic priests and bishops who serve American Catholicism. Only in that 
        ending and beginning light will we grasp the sacrifices they make, all 
        well-hidden from the world, to carry out their mission. They are called 
        mediators, they are the men in the middle of the wrenching problems that 
        have visited the structures of clericalism over the past generation. When 
        a (TV) programme such as that shown recently on Home Box Office about 
        priest sexual abusers is aired, these good men feel the winch of pressure 
        on their lives tighten a little more. However, such shows are not about 
        good, dedicated priests, not even the priesthood, but a clerical culture 
        that is disintegrating as poignantly as 1940 France. It deserves dispassionate 
        study and reformation. (Kennedy, E, 'Sex abuse crisis not invented', National 
        Catholic Reporter, Vol 32 No 30, 24 May 1996, pp 4-7)   
       
 The Third DraftThis is the third draft of a document which 
        the author commenced in 1996 after the outburst from his cousin, she furious 
        over that priest in (a suburb of Melbourne) who, she said, had a live-in 
        boy friend. It is a fact that the priest in question received a change 
        soon after the matter had been laid before the Archbishop, whether guilty 
        or not I do not know. However, has anything changed since the first 
        draft ? Well much has developed, but only one informing idea has altered 
        in my mind. The author believed (in 1996) that if 
        a priest or Brother had a normal heterosexual affair of any substantial 
        length he could never settle down to resume a celibate life and might 
        as well leave the priesthood or Religious life. Time and more research 
        and more evidence have shown that this is not necessarily true. Some priests or Brothers can, after an affair, 
        resume a normal celibate life. How many can and how many cannot is not 
        known with certainty, but it is possible and has been done - reasonably 
        often. 
       
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